Bolstering community well-being
A number of factors influence community well-being. Physical and mental health, access to basic needs, security, opportunity and social connection are just a few important factors that people need to thrive. To improve the health and well-being of populations thus requires the ability to more accurately assess and measure such factors.
In 2020, the Barnes Family Foundation partnered with the 91̽»¨ Population Health Initiative to develop the Social Weather initiative. The vision of this project was to create a novel approach to measuring and assessing community well-being to support informed decision-making by communities as they assessed where to invest in interventions intended to improve well-being outcomes.
The team’s key areas of focus for Social Weather were:
- Data Quality Improvement – Improving the quality and availability of well-being data for communities by identifying sources of untapped data and improving the granularity and timeliness of data to better measure well-being. Community feedback regarding what data is most important to them drives this work.
- Community Well-Being Data Dashboard – Creating an interactive platform that makes well-being data more accessible through interactive data visualizations and additional tools and resources to support communities in making data-driven decisions. The project team is working closely with communities to better understand the needs and challenges they face when using data to improve well-being.
The 91̽»¨project team included faculty, students and staff from the College of Arts & Sciences, 91̽»¨Bothell, Engineering, the eScience Institute, Evans School of Public Policy & Governance, Information School, Medicine, Nursing, Public Health, Social Work and the Center for Studies in Demography & Ecology. The Social Weather team also included researchers, community members and other key stakeholders from across the United States.